No matter what happens in this year’s election, the year will be like none other in the U.S. Are the mainstream media — which arguably helped lead us to our current mess at the edge of a potential collapse of American democracy — able to meet the challenge? To serve a nation that badly news an unapologetic press able to call out the corrupted without “both sidesing” every issue? That’s where we begin on today’s BradCast, before covering a whole bunch of accountability for rightwingers and rightwing organizations in recent days and weeks. [Audio link to full show follows below this summary.]

It seems impossible to believe that the U.S. mainstream media will be able to meet this moment. And yet, there are signs, suggests our guest today, longtime journalist and media critic DAN FROOMKIN of Press Watch, formerly of Washington Post, Huff Post, The Intercept and Harvard’s journalism watchdog, the Neiman Foundation.

In a column late last year, Froomkin detailed the “intense internal pressure to defend democracy” that newsrooms will be facing in 2024. The greatest pressure, he reports, is likely to come not from outside those newsrooms, but from inside, where “traditional bosses are still in control,” holding fast to “both sides” journalism, but where they are finally being challenged by what he describes as a “silent journalistic majority”, an often younger and/or more diverse group of reporters “whose sense of self is defined by more than just not taking sides. It’s defined by informing the public of the truth.”

With the stakes now higher than ever, he observes, there are signs, at least, that some in the traditional, unhelpful mainstream are begin to change in order to meet the moment. It’s a tall order — especially after so many decades of failure — but there are some positive signs that even the traditionalists are beginning to understand the threat posed to American democracy itself by a Republican party which has now all but fallen to the fascistic, autocratic demands of its cult leader.

“The good news — and it is unusual for me to focus on the good news in the media — is that I think we’re seeing two steps forward, one step back, in that I do see some braver, more honest, more upfront journalism happening on occasion at the major institutions,” Froomkin tells me, before adding, “And then every so often, they’ll backslide terribly.”

He argues that many are “getting really impatient with this ‘both-side’-ism, this ‘a pox on both your houses’ stuff.”

“If you talk to any journalist who is not personally invested in the old way of doing things, you’ll find that they actually agree with this critique. It is not a radical critique anymore. It is very much a ‘How do we do journalism in this day and age?’ question. And I think the answer is increasingly becoming that we need to call it out the way we see it. And that we need to stand up for democracy and for a free press, and for core journalistic values. It doesn’t mean telling people to go vote Democratic, it doesn’t mean being easy on the Democrats. But it does mean pointing out what this danger is right now.”

“If Trump takes power, he’s going to go after the media. And he will criminalize journalism in a lot of ways, and the free press will be under a lot of pressure. I don’t think any journalist can sit there and say, ‘I’ll be fine if Trump wins.’ They should all be terrified,” Froomkin asserts, adding: “An increasing number are. You’re seeing some of that, for instance, in this story on political violence. That was one of the big issues swept under the rug until recently.”

As Froomkin explains, the jury is very much still out. But what he once saw as a “generational project” now needs to happen much quicker. “The stakes feel so high right at this moment — for obvious reasons — that I think there’s pretty good chance of change before November,” he wrote last month. We’ll see if he’s right about that.

In the meantime, there has been some encouraging news elsewhere, at least from the court system in recent weeks, resulting in a rush of long-overdue accountability for people and organizations of the corrupted right.

FINALLY, as today’s show ended, it looks like former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has decided to suspend his 2024 GOP Presidential campaign (much as we called for him to do — if he was truly serious about keeping Trump out of the White House — on yesterday’s program.) The announcement comes just hours before a debate tonight between Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis in advance of Monday’s Iowa Caucuses. Presumptive frontrunner Donald Trump won’t be at this debate either, but we will have Special Coverage, nonetheless, for some reason, on tomorrow’s BradCast

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One Response

  1. “To serve a nation that badly news an unapologetic press”

    That badly “needs” … please delete comment.